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1  of a pathogenic bacterium from an avirulent saprophyte.
2 or circadian timing among both pathogens and saprophytes.
3 ndary metabolite production by these sessile saprophytes.
4  Hsf1 been conserved in this obligate animal saprophyte?
5 ase and alternates between a budding haploid saprophyte and a filamentous dikaryotic pathogen.
6 hich it alternates between a budding haploid saprophyte and a filamentous dikaryotic pathogen.
7  in diverse environments, both as a harmless saprophyte and an opportunistic human pathogen.
8    Sinorhizobium meliloti can live as a soil saprophyte and can engage in a nitrogen-fixing symbiosis
9 It is our opinion that Bt is not primarily a saprophyte and does not require the assistance of commen
10      Alternaria brassicicola is a successful saprophyte and necrotrophic plant pathogen.
11 sus because it is a ubiquitous environmental saprophyte and normal hosts are not commonly infected.
12               Aspergillus flavus is a common saprophyte and opportunistic pathogen that produces nume
13 Burkholderia pseudomallei is a soil-dwelling saprophyte and the causative agent of melioidosis, a lif
14                     N. crassa is of course a saprophyte and there is no complete sequence available f
15 ionts and pathogens, SSPs also have roles in saprophytes and function in P. ostreatus as components o
16  foraging and long-distance communication in saprophytes and mycorrhizal fungi.
17 ngi from the genus Aspergillus are important saprophytes and opportunistic human fungal pathogens tha
18 obes called oomycetes include many important saprophytes and pathogens, with the latter exhibiting ne
19 athogen, B. thailandensis is a nonpathogenic saprophyte, and B. mallei is a host-restricted pathogen.
20 es; it is found in the soil as a free-living saprophyte, and it also lives as a nitrogen-fixing intra
21            Fungi ranging from mycorrhizae to saprophytes are well preserved in Rhynie rocks, and oomy
22 dosis is infection caused by the flagellated saprophyte Burkholderia pseudomallei.
23 n Australia caused by the gram-negative soil saprophyte Burkholderia pseudomallei.
24 ggest that Coccidioides species are not soil saprophytes, but that they have evolved to remain associ
25 erstand cellodextrin utilization in the soil saprophyte Cellvibrio japonicus found that only one of f
26 diodies, which is believed to grow as a soil saprophyte in arid deserts.
27 e bacterium that replicates as a free-living saprophyte in the environment as well as a facultative i
28 s, while the mycelial phase exists only as a saprophyte in the soil.
29 al niches and has diverse lifestyle options (saprophyte, insect pathogen and plant symbiont), that re
30 s, but it has been assumed to be an innocent saprophyte; its potential role as a cause of lung diseas
31 es to bind fibronectin when expressed in the saprophyte, Leptospira biflexa.
32 rupting O-mannosylation in the nonpathogenic saprophyte Mycobacterium smegmatis and in the human path
33                                     The soil saprophyte Mycobacterium smegmatis has two such [NiFe] h
34        We deleted mqo from the environmental saprophyte Mycobacterium smegmatis, which lacks Mdh, and
35 ll mycobacteria, including the nonpathogenic saprophyte Mycobacterium smegmatis.
36 lays a role in the response to stress of the saprophyte Mycobacterium smegmatis.
37 s the pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus and the saprophyte Neurospora crassa.
38  fungal pathogen Candida albicans grows as a saprophyte on mucosal surfaces.
39  pathogen that can otherwise exist as a soil saprophyte or a plant endophyte.
40                            P. fluorescens (a saprophyte) or hrp mutants defective in the Hrp secretio
41 ective in type III secretion, as well as the saprophyte Pseudomonas fluorescens A506, sensed water po
42 alysis of physiological changes of the plant saprophyte Pseudomonas putida following 6 h of attachmen
43 85 paralogs, including one pathogen- and two saprophyte-specific groups.
44                    As free-living non-motile saprophytes, Streptomyces need to adapt to a wide range
45 ted only on rich media, whereas E. coli is a saprophyte that can grow on minimal media.
46 ngus Trichoderma virens is a ubiquitous soil saprophyte that has been applied as a biological control
47           Scedosporium prolificans is a soil saprophyte that is associated with a large variety of in
48 is caused by Malassezia spp, which are human saprophytes that sometimes switch from yeast to pathogen
49 enes from P. s. syringae 61 and confers upon saprophytes the ability to secrete HopPsyA in culture an
50 a variety of lifestyles ranging from aquatic saprophytes to invasive pathogens.
51 roducts and exhibit diverse lifestyles, from saprophytes to opportunistic pathogens.
52  Here we show that M. robertsii mediates the saprophyte-to-insect pathogen transition through modulat
53     Corynebacterium striatum is a ubiquitous saprophyte with the potential to cause bacteremia in imm
54 es species are generally non-pathogenic soil saprophytes, yet within their genome we can find homolog